Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Shall I tell his wife about your affair?

390 replies

IWillHaveAnotherOneThankYou · 02/04/2020 22:04

Hello all,

I am fairly new here, I actually just registered because I'd really like to know people's opinions on my situation.

In autumn last year I became close to my then colleague. He was newly separated from his wife, but not divorced. They have three kids (a 4 year old and 1 year old twins). He'd moved to a small rented flat and left his wife and the kids in their home. The plan was, as he told me straight from the start, to start the divorce in summer 2020 because apparently that's when his wife's widowed mother would officially retire and move in with his wife to help with the kids (they're apparently a bit of a handful).

He said that his wife doesn't know about us because it's better this way apparently. He indicated that it may be easier for everyone to tell her after the divorce to keep 'things in check', whatever that means.

The thing is that we didn't hide our affair very well at work and as a result I lost my job because of that (it wasn't so straightforward but essentially it came down to the fact that one of us had to go and as he was senior, but not my manager, he was more 'valuable' for the company and so I had to go). That was in January. I have got over it more less by now, however, as he's an experienced IT expert, he was head hunted for and was offered a better job elsewhere and left the company a month after me to start in his new, better paid job. So the sum total of this is that I've lost my job but cannot find a new one easily, at least not in my line of work, because most companies have temporarily frozen recruitment, whilst he's enjoying a great step up in his career. Unfair much?

To top it off, just before the lockdown he moved back home (apparently for the sake of the kids so that they don't suffer without seeing him for the duration of the lockdown) but his wife's mother is apparently there as well, supposedly helping with the kids and he confirmed that she's taken the guest bedroom which would mean that he's back in the marital bed with his wife. So there is he with his wife and her mother and of course the three kids in their home, for the duration of the isolation.

Here is the thing - our relationship has become rather sour, I'd even say non-existent during this lockdown period. Previously he would message me a 100 times a day, but now I haven't heard from him for a couple of days. Previously he would be super affectionate, lovey dovey, planning our future and generally being swept of his feet by me etc etc etc. Now, at my age (36) I approach this love bombing with caution but I think he really was genuine when things were great. I don't understand what's happened but I feel very hurt by the sudden lack of his attention. When I asked him about it, he didn't really say anything.

I went from feeling sad, to confused, to super angry. When I consider that I lost my job because of our affair (I know, I know, I took part in it voluntarily) but he smoothly transitioned from one job to another, it makes me fume inside. He used to be all lovey dovey treating me almost like the love of his life - this went on consistently for months and now nothing. I don't hear anything from him at all. Not a beep. I've tried to initiate some contact this week but he came across as distant and all his affection/love/ enthusiasm for me was gone.

I am super angry. I am also feeling lonely (I live alone). I am jobless and generally things are not easy. I probably came off as a bit of clingy when trying to talk to him this week, that's not my usual self. He always admired how strong and independent I am. And now I was almost begging for attention. It's not a situation I've experienced before and my ego is taking over my rationale. The last straw was when tonight I saw him bragging to someone about his new job on LinkedIn. I really, really feel very close to letting his wife know about us....They were separated anyways and according to him, the divorce proceedings were to start in summer. It just seems so very unfair that he seems to be getting away with everything and coming across as the good guy (a responsible father who didn't want to be separated from the kids too long and a reliable breadwinner who quickly moved to a better paid job). Nobody knows about our affair - well, apart from people at our old office, but deep down I wish he suffered a bit too. I know it's awful to admit this, I should probably be the better person here but it's very, very hard. Normally the right thing to do in this situation would be to move on and find someone else, with better circumstances but I can't even date anyone else because of this lockdown! Part of me deep down wants to let his wife know which would, potentially, make their isolation situation rather unpleasant, hopefully for him mainly!

Thoughts please? I think I know what you all will probably tell me - that I should raise above it and let it be and move on. But that's that one thing that it's hard for me to do and I dont' even want to do that if I am perfectly honest. It feels like I am the one who is paying for everything but he's is breezily running through it all with flying effing colours...

OP posts:
BrooHaHa · 03/04/2020 14:41

How far is that?

No one ever said life was fair, OP.

PrinnyPree · 03/04/2020 14:44

Well I'd speak to a solicitor regarding the fact that you got sacked because he is more senior because of your affair. As for the wife, leave that one alone. Block and move on.

SudokuQueen · 03/04/2020 14:46

OP why are you now talking about him "cheating", since you have said he was separated? Which is it?

Because she is lying. They got together when he was with the wife.

ilovemydogandMrObama · 03/04/2020 14:48

Could the wife already know - it could explain the radio silence and the moving back in.

If your previous employer knew, and believe me, if one person knew, then there were numerous others who also knew, there are bound to be people who knew them both and felt she should know.

Having worked in several work places where people had affairs, it was never a secret for very long.

BrooHaHa · 03/04/2020 14:51

I hope that's the case @ilovemydogandMrObama.

JennysTailor · 03/04/2020 14:52

I am finding it hard to believe you are 36. You should know by now that the shit always lands on the woman in these situations (in lots of situations actually). You slept with a married, more senior colleague. You knew he was married and his wife had recently given birth. Those were the facts regardless of whatever he told you. I agree with PP that said you are acting as if in a rage with your first boyfriend. This man is a total shit, you can't have been sleeping with each other for more than six months if it started last autumn. I would have been repulsed had a man in his situation made moves on me. His only loyalties are with himself.

Eckhart · 03/04/2020 14:54

I think that's what's at the base of this: 'It's not FAIR!!!'

Are you concerned about any other aspects of his wife's welfare, OP? I doubt it. Because it's not really about helping her have her best life going forward, is it. Her life has nothing to do with you. The action you're considering taking is about you, and you only.

JennysTailor · 03/04/2020 14:55

All this fucking revenge shit is simply a way to avoid taking any responsibility for your own actions.
It was all ok until it wasn't. Learn from it OP and grow up and move on.

I agree with this. Take this time to figure out what you want to do next for yourself and your career. Learn from it.

usersouthcoast · 03/04/2020 14:58

You've had SO many people try to talk you out of this. Ghost him in dignified silence. You won't be the last, he'll get his comeuppance.

But you're not bloody listening. I'm bored of you now - he obviously got bored too.

Opaljewel · 03/04/2020 15:04

This might not be popular but I think you should tell her. Lockdown or not her life could be one big lie. I would want to know if it was me. I don't think anyone would be happy that someone knew and chose not to tell x

inacheeseandpicklesandwhich · 03/04/2020 15:09

I would let her know then hopefully the twat will be chucked out in his ass with no where to go ! His mil prob ain't there to help with kids cause you were not going to be there but because she didn't want to be away from her family for the whole time this lockdown is in place . Had his cake now and he's defo not bothering now cause he can't get out to have his fun so what's the point in contacting you when he ain't getting nothing out of it now x

Carpathian2 · 03/04/2020 15:22

I was the wife in this scenario OP. My exh was having an affair when I was pregnant with my third and I had three under 5.

The OW's mum told me what was going on and I'm glad she did. He left me for the OW and I was left with 3 small children and Yes anything for you! money, but at least I knew what a cunt he was and wasn't fooling myself. After about 3 years, she left him because he was having an affair behind her back. He came crawling back to me and it gave me immense pleasure to tell him to fuck right off!

Fast forward 30 years, and his second wife has left him and he's alone. Karma really does work ( sometimes not as long as 30 years though). I can see him for what he really is, and he knows it and is ashamed. Good!

My point is, I would tell his wife but not in a spiteful way, just state facts. You never know, she might be grateful for knowing the truth as I was. You've been royally fucked over by him but you'll come out tops. I guarantee it Thanks

WithLotsOfSprinkles0 · 03/04/2020 15:24

I vote tell her and make his time in isolation as miserable as possible.

Yes its pretty, evil and immature but hes a c**t who deserves it quite frankly

BackseatCookers · 03/04/2020 16:00

Normally the right thing to do in this situation would be to move on and find someone else, with better circumstances but I can't even date anyone else because of this lockdown!

No normally the right thing to do would be to be single for a while, even if there wasn't a lockdown. You shouldn't need to see someone new to get over someone else.

Have you considered for one moment the children in all this ? If you send those messages, his wife is bound to react, there will be rows and tears and shouting, all in front of the children, all cooped up together. Absolutely awful for them. So don’t even think about it.

This. Imagine the fallout of dropping this bomb there during lockdown. Nobody has thought about the kids in this situation so disengaging completely and not contacting him or his wife would be the decent thing for you to do.

You'd be punishing the kids in order to punish him. Surely you're a better person than that?

Set aside if you should usually tell a wife or not - lockdown changes what is appropriate because they are stuck in that house together and the poor kids would be the ones suffering, along with her mum.

Don't be a dick.

juliastone · 03/04/2020 16:04

I once let the wife know. But the thing is, I didn't know at all that the wife actually existed and the guy strung me along for half a year.
I felt better after letting her know, because I felt that we both deserved to know.
This, however, is not your situation.
You knew the guy was married and you knew that he had left his wife with 3 children under 5, 2 of those who were babies! I'm not blaming you, it's his fault, I'm just saying you had all the information, his background check.

This guy is a scumbag. Did you expect him to be good to you?
He actually continued being true to himself, when he watched the company make you redundant, and didn't do anything to prevent it, though he could have.
This guy only cares about himself, it's so glaring obvious.

It's really strange that you don't see that this has been such a lucky escape for you. Don't you think you deserve a better person in your life?

ShagMeRiggins · 03/04/2020 16:32

I am starting to think that the majority of people would prefer to be lied to (if they were the wife) and spend their life in a total lie than facing the facts and having to deal with them. I personally would want to know if my husband/boyfriend was cheating on me because spending my life in a complete lie would make me feel like an idiot who was being led on. Plus, I would want to be given a chance to decide whether I'd like to carry on being with a cheater. I am sure that when she was marrying him, she didn't knowingly and voluntarily signed up for a lifetime spent next to a cheater.

Make up your mind. Either he’s a cheater or you didn’t cheat because he was separated (for a month or two).

As for sending the wife texts or photos or whatever, she knew she was separated—he had moved out—so likely knew the situation.

Sending her proof benefits no one.

Why would you want to cause pain to someone who has never done anything to you?

IWillHaveAnotherOneThankYou · 03/04/2020 16:34

I am not saying I want him back. In fact I've already written here at least once that I do NOT want him back but I do want things to be fair, or at least fairer. Right now he's having the proverbial cake and is eating it too. So no, I don't think that by letting his wife know I'd improve my situation in any PRACTICAL way (I still wont' have a job and I will still have to deal with the issues I am dealing with now, such as how I am going to pay my rent from July/August forward). But at the same way I cannot, hard as I try, get rid of the feeling that he should have shown me some (any!) act of his goodwill, maybe offering to lend me money for my rent for, say, three months - that would hopefully take me to the point where I could secure a job in my line of work. Or anything else, but he has done nothing. Nothing at all. Not a tiny act of goodwill...so I am sorry, but I do feel angry and I do feel that his wife should know, just like many pp's here have said, including those who were in the situation of his wife before.

OP posts:
IWillHaveAnotherOneThankYou · 03/04/2020 16:35

@juliastone Btw, may I ask how the wife reacted when you told her? Just out of curiosity?

OP posts:
Iateallthecookies000 · 03/04/2020 16:37

Money for service rendered...

Just so you know, blackmail is illegal in the UK

IWillHaveAnotherOneThankYou · 03/04/2020 16:45

*Money for service rendered...

Just so you know, blackmail is illegal in the UK*

Well, I wasn't going to blackmail him and I haven't. I am actually quite surprised how nasty some people can be. No, I didn't expect to come to hear praise and get approval for my plan to contact his wife but I was hoping for some objective input. But it seems that once a woman gets married and becomes a wife and a mother, she's suddenly untouchable and almost treated like a saint. I don't know anything about his wife, she may be a great person, she may not. I don't know. But I am shocked to see how many people automatically take the wife's side and blame me, leaving him somewhere in the middle.

OP posts:
ShagMeRiggins · 03/04/2020 16:46

I am starting to wonder how much he was actually lying to me about. I could only go by what he said to me, it all made sense back then so I believed him

Have you no autonomy? Did you not ask yourself whether you’d like to be with a man who leaves the mother of his pre-schooler and twin infants?

The work situation—you have a case and could/should make it through legal channels.

The rest is Me, Me, Me, hurt, revenge, immature.

BackseatCookers · 03/04/2020 16:49

Do you honestly feel like you could be so cold as to tell his wife this during lockdown and risk the fallout that she and the kids would endure while being forced to live under the same roof for at least a month probably more?

When people say don't tell her you say well wouldn't you want to know your husband cheated.

When people say well you cheated so thems the breaks, suck it up, you say you didn't cheat as he was separated.

Just leave it. Yes it's shit and it's not fair but life isn't fair and you played with fire having an affair (you described it this way) with a senior colleague.

Shit happens, you won't feel better about yourself in the long run if you drop this bomb during lockdown.

Focus on you, do nice things for yourself, make a plan for career stuff, update your portfolio (or whatever the equivalent is in your sector) and stop giving this headspace.

It's turning you into a nasty person who is being driven by bitterness and jealousy - saying the kids being upset isn't your responsibility etc. Well no of course they aren't your responsibility but you'd still be a dick to do something so cruel to them in the current climate because they are kids. And three kids are always going to be a handful so that was a strange thing to add in about them.

Don't you want to be a happy, kind, fun person? This is poisoning you and it's seeping into even your words on here. Onwards and upwards.

Iateallthecookies000 · 03/04/2020 16:51

But I am shocked to see how many people automatically take the wife's side and blame me.

Er, you shagged her husband. She hasn’t done anything wrong. It’s a bit disturbing that you can’t understand this.

BogRollQueen · 03/04/2020 16:52

You are incredibly immature for a woman in her 30s, OP. That last post sounds like a spiteful 16 yr old girl having a tantrum.

This is all about the fact he picked her, not you, isn’t it? Might as well be honest with yourself.

Beachtowel23 · 03/04/2020 16:56

People are taking the wife’s side because your wanting to hurt her when she hasn’t done anything wrong, and because it seems you want revenge. Remember she is the innocent in all of this